Exam 3: National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes
Exam 1: The Science of Macroeconomics58 Questions
Exam 2: The Data of Microeconomics108 Questions
Exam 3: National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes159 Questions
Exam 4: The Monetary System: What It Is and How It Works99 Questions
Exam 5: Inflation: Its Causes, Effects, and Social Costs86 Questions
Exam 6: The Open Economy102 Questions
Exam 7: Unemployment and the Labour Market90 Questions
Exam 8: Economic Growth I: Capital Accumulation and Population Growth99 Questions
Exam 9: Economic Growth II: Technology, Empirics, and Policy83 Questions
Exam 10: Introduction to Economic Fluctuations94 Questions
Exam 11: Aggregate Demand I: Building the Islm Model87 Questions
Exam 12: Aggregate Demand Ii: Applying the Islm Model92 Questions
Exam 13: The Open Economy Revisited: the Mundellfleming Model and the Exchange-Rate Regime106 Questions
Exam 14: Aggregate Supply and the Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment88 Questions
Exam 15: A Dynamic Model of Economic Fluctuations83 Questions
Exam 16: Alternative Perspectives on Stabilization Policy78 Questions
Exam 17: Government Debt and Budget Deficits75 Questions
Exam 18: The Financial System: Opportunities and Dangers92 Questions
Exam 19: The Microfoundations of Consumption and Investment112 Questions
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Assume that the consumption function is given by C = 150 + 0.85(Y - T) and the tax function is given by T = t0 + t1Y. If t0 increases by 1 unit, then consumption:
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that the production function is given by Y = AK0.5L0.5, where Y is GDP, K is capital stock, and L is labour. The parameter A is equal to 10. Assume also that capital is 100, labour is 400, and both capital and labour are paid for their marginal products.
a.What is Y?
b.What is the real wage of labour?
c.What is the real rental price of capital (the amount of output paid per unit of capital)?
(Essay)
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According to the neoclassical theory of distribution, in an economy described by a Cobb-Douglas production function, workers should experience high rates of real wage growth when:
(Multiple Choice)
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In the neoclassical model with fixed income, if there is a decrease in government spending with no change in taxes, then public saving _____ and private saving _____.
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that the production function is Cobb-Douglas with parameter α = 0.3. In the neoclassical model, if the labour force increases by 10 percent, then output:
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that GDP (Y) is 5,000. Consumption (C) is given by the equation C = 1,200 + 0.3(Y - T) - 50r, where r is the real interest rate, in percent. Investment (I) is given by the equation I = 1,500 - 50r. Taxes (T) are 1,000, and government spending (G) is 1,500.
a.What are the equilibrium values of C, I, and r?
b.What are the values of private saving, public saving, and national saving?
c.Now assume there is a technological innovation that makes business want to invest more. It raises the investment equation to I = 2,000 - 50r. What are the new equilibrium values of C, I, and r?
d.What are the new values of private saving, public saving, and national saving?
(Essay)
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The production function feature called "constant returns to scale" means that if we:
(Multiple Choice)
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If the productivity of farmers has risen substantially over time because of technological progress, and workers can move freely between being farmers and barbers, the neoclassical theory of distribution predicts that the real wages of:
(Multiple Choice)
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With a Cobb-Douglas production function, the share of output going to labour:
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that the investment function is given by I = 1,000 - 30r, where r is the real rate of interest (in percent). Assume further that the nominal rate of interest is 10 percent and the inflation rate is 2 percent. According to the investment function, investment will be:
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that the production function is Cobb-Douglas with parameter α = 0.3. If capital and labour are paid their marginal products, they receive the shares of income:
(Multiple Choice)
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The investment function slopes _____ because there are _____ investment projects that are profitable as the interest rate decreases.
(Multiple Choice)
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The government raises lump-sum taxes on income by $100 billion, and the neoclassical economy adjusts so that output does not change. If the marginal propensity to consume is 0.6, investment:
(Multiple Choice)
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In the classical model with fixed income, if the demand for goods and services is less than the supply, the interest rate will:
(Multiple Choice)
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If income is 4,800, consumption is 3,500, government purchases is 1,000, and taxes minus transfers are 800, public saving is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that equilibrium GDP (Y) is 5,000. Consumption (C) is given by the equation C = 500 + 0.6(Y - T). Taxes (T) are equal to 600. Government spending is equal to 1,000. Investment is given by the equation I = 2,160 - 100r, where r is the real interest rate, in percent. In this case, the equilibrium real interest rate is:
(Multiple Choice)
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If a technological advancement increases productivity, the neoclassical theory of distribution predicts that:
(Multiple Choice)
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